EC rejects Congress’ plea for machine-readable Maharashtra voters’ list

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Rahul Gandhi claims 2024 Maharashtra polls 'blueprint' for rigging



NEW DELHI: A day after the Congress urged the Election Commission to provide machine-readable digital copy of the Maharashtra voters’ list, EC sources on Thursday said the demand is “not tenable” under the prevailing legal framework, asserting that a similar plea of the party was junked by the Supreme Court in 2019.The EC sources said while Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has been demanding for machine-readable, digital copy of the electoral roll for the last seven months, such demand by the Congress is “not new”.”Rather, it forms part of a strategy by the political party for well over eight years, a fact that appears to have been selectively obscured in the present representation,” an EC source pointed out.The EC sources said the demand reiterated by Gandhi, albeit consistent with the position historically maintained by the Congress, is “not tenable within the contours of the prevailing legal framework”.They pointed out that the issue was already agitated by the Congress before the Supreme Court in a writ petition in 2018 filed by Kamal Nath, the then president of the Madhya Pradesh Congress Committee.”It appears that Gandhi, the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha, may not have been appropriately apprised of the finality with which the matter stands concluded in judicial record,” they said.Referring to the Supreme Court’s verdict in Kamal Nath vs Election Commission of India, (2019), the sources said that top court had observed that it found force in the submission of EC.Clause 11.2.2.2 of the Election Manual uses the expression “text mode”.



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